similarities and differences

CATEGORYSIMILARITIESDIFFERENCESTHEORY
CHARACTERSthe detective who has a ‘natural’ instinct for law and orderThe Killing, The mising has the main detective as femalePROPP
NARRATIVEthe first episode often introduces a lot of different characterswe are introduced to a conflictTODOROV
THEMESthe use of binary oppostions around familiar themes: family, community, law and order, justice.family, justice, LEVI-STRAUSS
REPRESENTATIONreactionary representations of police, family, law and order, urban/ruralSEMIOTICS
TECHNICAL CODES / LANGUAGE OF MOVING IMAGE (music, setting, props, lighting, use of camera, editing etc)opening montage sequence that often gives clues as to the whole series – themes, locations, characters, events etc.

technology and newspapers

ProductonDistrobutionConsumption
pen/pencil/paper
word processor/ printer
telephone
Camera
computer
speaker
(large scale) printing press
lorries/vans/cars
stacks / shelves / display cases
social media
storage
billboards
company/ organisation
planes/boats
adverts

paper ( the ability to read? and understand?)
a digital device
( iPad/phone/computer)
Ability to read and understand

re-cap questions

Network Effects= describes the phenomenon how the value of a good or service increases as more people start to use it.

Feedback loops are therefore the process whereby a change to the system results in an alarm which will trigger a certain result. they also provide information to an organization about system successes and problems.

Dunbar’s number is a suggested cognitive limit
(150) to the number of people with whom one can maintain stable social relationships

Jean Seaton

Public service broadcasting

  • Broadcasting in Britain was a monopoly or duopoly
  • monopoly – illegal business structure where one business owns all businesses in an industry either through vertical or horizontal integration (horizontal – owns each stage to produce a product / service) (vertical – owns all businesses of the same type eg all TV stations), monopolies can be terminated by selling one stage / business of the same type to someone else)

Curran & Seaton

‘newspapers and magazines must respond to the concerns of their readers if they are to stay in business’ pg 326

‘noted that the national press was overwhelmingly right wing’

‘the internet has enhanced the freedom to publish by lowering entry costs.’ – The Liberal theory of press freedom pg 327

The I facts

History: The i has taken under control of JPIMedia the day after Jhonston Pres filed for administration on 16th November 2018. The paper and website were bought by the Daily mail and General trust on 29th November 2019 for £49.6 million.

Format: The i is presented as a hybrid of a Tabloid and a broadsheet because there is lots of information as well as gossip and images.

Editors: The editor of The i is Oliver duff.

Political stance: The stance of the i seems to focus on inequality however it claims to have a balance on the political spectrum.

Target Audience: The i had 22 million in the year of 2018 October to 2019 September in Great Britain. The target audience was to a vary of age groups from teens to adults (15-35) however the audience that read the paper more often was adults of over 35.

Cost: The cost of The i increased from 60p to 65p in 2017 then again to 80p.

Circulation: The i amount of papers sold was 221,083 in October 2019.

Profit: The paper is making at least 1milllion a month as of December 6 2017. https://www.pressgazette.co.uk/johnston-press-says-it-is-now-making-1m-a-month-profit-from-i-newspaper/

‘The I’ Newspaper

  • Launched in 2010 as a sister newspaper to The Independent
  • Editor = Oliver Duff
  • Owner = Daily Mail (as of late November 2019)
  • Claims to be politically neutral and instead of publishing news stories about specific parties, they try to focus more on social issues and inequality
  • First edition of the newspaper costed 20p
  • Current price = On 14 September 2019, The iweekend price rose from £1 to £1.20
  • The paper and its website were bought by the Daily Mail and General Trust (DMGT) on 29 November 2019, for £49.6 million
  • “i is specifically targeted at readers and lapsed readers of quality newspapers and those of all ages,”
  • Targeted at commuters who don’t have much time
  • In December 2017, the owners of The I announced that they were bringing in a monthly profit of around £1 million
  • Circulation = the amount of copies that a newspaper distributes in a day
  • The I’s Circulation = 221,083 (October 2019)

exam question notes

-UK regards press freedom as absolute freedom, the government leaves it down to the market forces to decide which press products survive.

-In the case of the press, with certain limited expectations, no legal restriction is placed on the right to buy or launch a newspaper. This ensures, in liberal theory, that the press is free, diverse and representative (Curran and Seaton).

In this view of freedom of expression, it is the interests of the press, not of its readers nor the subjects of its coverage which are fundamental.

Curran and Seaton – the idea that the media is controlled by a small number of companies primarily driven by the logic and power. The idea that more socially diverse patterns of ownership help to create the conditions for more varied and adventurous media production.